Holidays back on: Spain set to launch vaccine passports

Holidays back on: Spain set to launch vaccine passports after Greece signals it will reopen to tourists in mid-May – just as travel restrictions lift for Brits

  • Spanish tourism minister suggested plans could be in place by May 19
  • Comes after Greece said it will reopen on May 14 and Cyprus said May 1 for Brits
  • But Boris Johnson’s ban on overseas leisure travel won’t end until at least May 17
  • No.10 has signalled it will help Britons to gain documentation for digital passport 

Sunny Spanish holidays could be back on for Britons within weeks as the tourism minister revealed a vaccine passport system was planned for the middle of May. 

It comes after Greece announced plans to reopen to holidaymakers from mid-May and Cyprus said it would welcome fully-vaccinated Britons from May 1.

But those hoping to jet off for the Early May bank holiday are set to be barred by UK authorities because Boris Johnson has said he won’t allow overseas leisure travel until at least May 17. 

Spain’s tourism minister Reyes Maroto told a radio station on Wednesday: ‘We could be in a position to start implementing the digital passport (when the tourism fair FITUR starts on May 19).’  

SPAIN: People soak up the sun at Levante Beach in Benidorm

GREECE: Sunbathers relaxing on a beach in Greece in August 2017

Under the Government’s roadmap for England, this would mean that holidaymakers could fly freely to Spain – providing they had their jabs and the country hadn’t be added to the dreaded ‘red list’ from which entry to the UK is banned over Covid variant fears. 

EU leaders have agreed to work together on vaccine certificates to kick-start the tourism industry.

British ministers, while reluctant to talk about using digital passports domestically, have said they will help people to gain the necessary documentary proofs of vaccine if it is needed for travel. 

However, they have warned that the Continent’s woeful vaccine rollout could mean that freedom of movement is limited.

On Tuesday, Greek tourism minister Harry Theocharis said the country would be open on May 14 to international tourists who are vaccinated, have antibodies or can show proof of a negative Covid test. 

Addressing the ITB Berlin trade show, Mr Theocharis said: ‘Our only ambition is to ensure Greece is open to allow anybody who wishes to visit to be able to do so.’

He added that all holidaymakers will be subject to random testing.

It is thought tourists will be able to enter restriction-free after their first jab and children will need to arrive with a negative test. But the final details are still being sorted.

Greece joined Cyprus which announced a similar proposal for British tourists last week.

The Cypriot deputy tourism minister Savvas Perdios said on Thursday: ‘We have informed the British government that from May 1 we will facilitate the arrival of British nationals who have been vaccinated … so they can visit Cyprus without a negative test or needing to quarantine.’ 

Visitors would need to be inoculated with vaccines approved by the European Medicines Agency, the tourism minister said.

And the second dose of the vaccine must have been administered at least a week before travel, Perdios added. 

Millions of Britons visit Spain, Greece and Cyprus each year to escape to sunny beaches and their tourism industries, ravaged by Covid, rely heavily on British support. 

In a single summer month, nearly 10 million Britons can land in Spain, and Brits provide more tourists than any other country.  

Nearly four million British tourists normally visit Greece each year, contributing more than £2 billion to the economy. 

And in Cyprus, more than a million Britons visit each year – more than from any other country – and the tourism industry accounts for 13 per cent of the Cypriot economy.  

Arrivals and earnings from the sector plunged on average 85 per cent last year. 

Yesterday Harry Theocharis, Greek tourism minister, said the country would be open to international tourists who are vaccinated, have antibodies or can show proof of a negative Covid test (stock image)

European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen announced that plans for a ‘digital green pass’ will be set out this month to allow tourism and business travel to resume on the Continent.

The pass, a version of which has already been adopted in Israel, would allow people to prove they have been vaccinated or tested negative for Covid-19. 

But British officials have warned that Europe’s slow vaccine progress means travel to the EU this summer remains shrouded in uncertainty.

The British government said last month that the resumption of foreign holiday travel ‘will be no earlier’ than May 17. 

Government ministers have said they will help to furnish Britons with the necessary paperwork to travel, but have been reluctant to say that a vaccine passport will be used as a matter of course domestically, as has been signalled in countries like Israel. 

England’s deputy chief medical officer Jonathan Van-Tam said last month there was ‘great uncertainty at the moment’ about when travel could resume.

‘We are still in a zone of great uncertainty about what the virus will do next,’ he told a Downing Street press conference.

‘On top of that, many of the vaccination programmes in Europe – which is a place where we frequently go on holiday abroad – are running behind ours.

Holidaymakers on Coral Bay beach in Cyprus in October 2017

‘Clearly, whether we can go on holiday abroad to places such as Europe depends on what other countries will say and do in terms of foreign tourism.’

Israel has already deployed a ‘green pass’ to allow people into sporting, dining and entertainment venues once they have been vaccinated.

Tourism-reliant countries such as Greece similarly want the ‘green pass’ to serve as a passport allowing people to evade tests or quarantine when travelling.

But other countries including France and Germany fear this would create a two-tier society where those still waiting for their jabs live under unfair restrictions.

Belgian foreign minister Sophie Wilmes echoed those concerns on Monday, saying there was ‘no question of linking vaccination to the freedom of movement’

‘Respect for the principle of non-discrimination is more fundamental than ever since vaccination is not compulsory and access to the vaccine is not yet generalised,’ she said.

What are the rules for entering Britain? 

  • You cannot enter the UK if you’ve been in or through a country on the banned travel list (known as the ‘red list’) in the last 10 days, unless you’re British, Irish or you have the right to live in the UK
  • You must either quarantine where you’re staying or in a managed quarantine hotel for 10 days
  • What you need to do depends on where you travel in the 10 days before you arrive – if you travel in or through a country on the banned travel list within 10 days, you must stay managed quarantine hotel; if not, you can quarantine at home
  • You need to provide your journey and contact details in the 48 hours before you arrive in the UK. You must do this by completing the online passenger locator form
  • You’ll need to show proof that you’ve completed the form when you arrive at the UK border as well as proof of a negative PCR or antigen test taken three days before departure 
  • You could be fined £500 when you arrive at the border if you cannot provide proof that you have had a negative coronavirus test
  • You do not need a test if you’re travelling within the UK, the Isle of Man, Jersey and Guernsey; from Ireland; from Ascension, Falkland Islands or St Helena; and children under 11 do not need a test 
  • After arriving at a quarantine hotel you will be tested on days two and eight of your stay using a PCR test self-administered in your room
  • In Scotland, arrivals from all international destinations have to quarantine, even if they are not on the red list. 

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